—Oil up the work barness now while you bave time. Is will pay. ~—In choosing cows for butter the quantity as well as the richness of the production milk mast be considered. ~The laxative effect of wheat bran as a stock feed ie due to an organic phosphate compound kuown as phytin. —Doun’s plant poor, weak seed corn next spring. Is is sime and money thrown Ve is plenty of good strong seed —A cow testing 3 per cent. butter fas may produce more butter than one which tests 5 per cent. provided she makes up in quantity of milk. ~The carl in a pig’s tail is an indication of geod health. the ourl begins to straighten ous, leok for disease and give medicine or a change of feed. —Timothy bay Wuvks youd saw feed. If you have a surplus of simothy and are short on clover, it will pay tosell the timothy hay and buy olover hay for the cows. ~—For best results the soil should be fat- i Eoghei " a,” for good a , are Jicldots of profit YN investment, but the should never be allowed to run down to the point where fertilizer is but imper- feot restoration of lost capital. Fertilizers should increase the native capacity of the soil, rather than replace excessively lost energies, —The tanction of balk in the feed is more than the mere furnishing of nutri- mens for in a mechanical way it aids di- gestion. Pigs require less bulky feed than other domestic animals, bus recent experi- ments show that to a certain extent bay feeding is very valuable in pork notion. Where animals have been ntained for an extended period on feed which was ex- olusively of a concentrated nature, derange- ment of digestion has invariably resulted. —Some hardy climbing plants may be started this spring, so that they will be in ot res of wieoenion ate) year. " m roses, rangeas, wistera, AOD oreeper, trumpet vines and boneysuckles are good climbers lor the ambitious gardener. Masses of color along fences are often effective. For this purpose no vines are better suited than nastartiumes, sweet peas, or some of the many varieties of flowering beans, like the scarlet runner or the hya- cinth bean. Morning glory, ornamental gourd, moon flower, Japanese hop, or wild cucumber may be trained to cover unsightly walls or high board fences. They are also effective when trained over trellises and old trees. —Cold wes raine and young lambe do not go well together. Keep them separate with s good roof and a windbreak. When separating ewes before lambing be sure that the pens are tight at the bottom, 80 the little lamb will wos crawl ons. Dou’s gramble if it is necessary for yon fo get up in the night a few times during lambing season. It won't hart you an y and is will belpa 1 in bringing the flock through ey »- In many oases ewes are not able to prop- erly nourish twin or triplet lambs, and the extra one must be removed and put upon other feed, it baving been found in many instances very profitable to raise lambs apon cow's milk. The mutton produced Suup such sheep is said to be very high e. —With young ohioks there is as muoh danger of over feeding as under feeding. Feed often and regularly, instead of too much at one time. All young animals should bave nourishment at (frequent intervals. Swollen eyes is usually due to roup, due to the fowls roosting ina damp house or one where there are cold draughts. Bathe the head of the affected fowl with swees oil or vasaline, and use chlorate of h in the drinking water, a teaspoonful to each quart of water. 4 vige before all the chickens are batobed, to keep different ages separate. The small ones are crowded ous and stippled or killed by the older ones. Sev- feeding coops should be provided, each for separate sizes. Remember shat batching chickens is nos half the task. Raising them without loss isa far greater task. The greater part of success lies in sustaining the young life Sad inaleing it develop into vigorous ma- ¥. Large breeds in general eat more than small ones during the growing period. Early hatohed chicks grow faster than late batched ones. April 1st seems to be a desirable time for hatohing in this latitude. The amount of feed required to produce a pound of gain increases as the chioks ap- proach maturity. Between the ages of six and thirteen weeks it required from four to four and three-quarters pounds of feed to produce a pound of gain. Between the ages of shir- teen and twenty-six weeks it required from four ani three-quarters to five and shree- quarters pounds of feed to produce a pound of gain. Chicks forved when young do not make as rapid growth as they approach maturity yy fed a more moderate ration. The loss among chicks on wet mash was much greater than smong those on dry feed, even when weighing less than one pound each. Tbe slaughter tests indicate that the American breeds dress out better than either she Mediterranean or Asiatic breeds, and that in general pullets dress ous better than cockerels. When rather small, weigh- ing less thao three and a baif pounds live weight, the cookerels of the Mediterranean and Asiatic breeds seem to dress out better ES, sr set about Apr seemed to dace she highest per cent. of ohioks. pro: Foroed moalting seems to first depress then increase slightly eggs production, but the net resalts at the end of three months were against forced moulting. The eggs of the different breeds in order of their weight were as follows: Black Wier te Whos, Sad Bk te " te Wyandotte, Rhode hite Crested Black Poliah. Buff Coohin. A great deal may depend Jpon iy strain, ae itis Juiun that some ens of any breed, normally la than others of the same breeds. Toe opm The weight of chicks when hatched does not seem to he in direot proportion to nol ms than od and w one a half or more do bess on dry — the frequent difficulty of collecting bills. One milliner tells of a letter she received from the wife of a man who in a brief time had advanced from poverty to great wealth. His family was still in obscurity, but was prepar- ing to emerge. “I want you should make a bonnet and two hats right off,” wrote the wife, “for me and the girls, and ex- pense is no account. “My measure is nearly twelve inches from ear to ear over the head and eight under chin and six from top of forard to back hair, and that's near enuff for both the girls. “I'm sandy, Jane is dark, and Lucy” got red hair. We want lively colors, and | want blue flowers and strings on mine, besides some plooms. “Jane wants hers green, and Lucy wants pink. We don’t care what shapes, but they must be becoming and so as they won't blow to peaces in the wind. Nor we don’t want them loud, for my husband won't hear to such. “Please send within five days, and if satisfatory bill will be paid at once.” —Youth’s Companion. Curly Hair Means Obstinzcy. The curly headed man uttered an ex- clamation of maze. “Strange,” he said, “I have been drawn for juries time and again, but I bave never served. They always challenge me. I wonder why?” “It is your curly hair,” said a law- yer. “A curly headed man kills a jury. He always causes it to disagree.” “That is not true. You must be crazy,” said the other. “It is the gospel truth,” the lawyer persisted. “Curly heads are as obsti- nate as mules. They think they know it all. They disagree with everybody. “It Is because,” he hastened to add, “their curly hair makes them so good looking. In childhood they are spoiled by their parents, and in maturity wo- men spoil them, falling in love with them on every side. So they become conceited. They disagree with every- body. Lawyers the world over recog- nize that as jurymen they would never do.””—New Orleans Times-Democrat. Had an Answer. This story is being told on a Swede in central Kansas who was given to excessive use of the bottle. He was working at a certain house, doing odd jobs, and the daughter of the hous. knew of his reprehensible habits. She thought it time for some one to re- monstrate with him on the error of his ways. “Why.” she asked, “are you not ashamed to spend all your wages and make your wife take in washing? Why don't you give her some money?” “Well,” he answered, “I have an in. come besides my wages.” “Oh, is that so?’ said the daughter, somewhat mollified. “Yes,” he said, “I have an income from the queen of Sweden.” “What for?” asked the girl “For minding my own business,” an- swered the Swede, going on with his work.— Kansas City Journal. The Troubles of a French Academician. The candidate, once elected, is bound to pronounce a harangue before he is allowed to take part in the work of the noble body. The director who hap- pens to be in office answers him. This oration is invariably, or at least should be, composed first of thanks, more or less humble, for the great honor con- ferred, then of a panegyric of the hap- py one’s predecessor. And, oh, how difficult that sometimes must be! More than one has rushed to the encyclope- dia, then to the libraries, so as to get some clear notion of the illustrious ex- immortal! Then fate is often ironical. A historian may have to celebrate the talent of a writer of light comedies, a legitimist may have to praise a Soclal- ist, or else the newly elected member may have to speak of his most inti- mate enemy.—Jeanne Mairet in At- lantie. Ancient Derricks. Probably the oldest derricks still in use are the two buiit at Trier. in Ger- many, in the year 1413 and the one built in 1554 at Andernach, also in Ger- many. All these three derricks are built on the same principle. In the middle of a massive A frame tower is located the swinging or main boom, 20 by 20 inches, whose iron pivot moves in a pan shaped bearing cup. On top are fastened the guy ropes and the cap, which Is also movable. The derrick can be moved by crossbars fastened to the main boom. The load is chain lifted by tread wheels sixteen feet in diameter. Wagner to the Musicians. Wagner's little. admonition to the musicians was most characteristic and worthy to be noted by many an or- chestra of this day. “Gentlemen,” he said, “I beg of you not to take my fortissimo too seriously. Where you see ‘fl’ make an ‘fp’ of it, and for piano play pianissimo. Remember how many of you there are down there against the one poor single human throat up here alone on the stage.”—Neumann's “Personal Recollections.” Got Even. “I'll never >ffer to be a sister to an- other man.” “Why not?” “The last one under the guise of brotherly advice told me some very unpalatable truths.” — Louisville Cou- rier-Journal. mss oman A Diplomat. “Does he always speak the truth?” “l guess not. All his friends praise his judgment.”—Detroit Free Press. He who swears distrusts his own words.—Latin Proverb. Every Price Should Have a Reason. It must be remembered always that it is not the price of an article which is important, but the reason for the price. The bankrupt stock, the fire sale, the manufacturer's remnants, the annual clearance, the removal sale, the disso- lution of partnership sale—what are Because there is no reasonable expla- nation for the reduction. Why should 2g Ba £8 one is business without imagination, and the other is business with it.— Lorin F. Deland in Atlantic, The Characteristic National Meal. It is not only in Scotland that break- fast is the characteristic national meal, Travel where you may, the first meal of the day is the one that strikes the foreign note, luncheon and dinner hav- ing gradually absorbed cosmopolitan qualities that are not even confined to hotels. But you never feel so much of an Englishman as when Switzerland gives you rolls and butter and honey and nothing more with your coffee or when France makes this into one ex- quisite crumbling “croissant,” with an inch or two from a yard long loaf, or when Denmark adds cream instead of milk to the coffee and a dangerous plece of pastry to the black bread and round white roll. Yet our English breakfast became an institution only in the eighteenth century. Before that only royalty breakfasted off meat, bread and cheese and ale. The com- moner, such as Pepys, took merely a morning draft of buttered ale.—~Lon- don Chronicle, A Compromise. A struggling art student, a native of Pont Aven, went to Paris to study and occasionally visited an uncle there, an elderly shoemaker on the Rue Vaugi- rard. The shoemaker was to be count- ed on for a square meal and sometimes even for & small loan. One morning the uncle welcomed the student far more warmly than was his habit. “Just in time,” he said, rubbing his hands. “The kitchen door wants paint- ing, and I was about to give the job to the commissicanasins far 3 francs. But you can have it now. I'll pay yon $5.” Bellefonte Shoe Emporium. "I'he stuzent uusnea ama oit OIS Up. Hard up as he was, he could not degrade his art as to paint a kite door. Yet he needed money badly. “Uncle,” he said, smiling as a ha thought came to him, “I'll tell y what to do. Let the com paint the door for 8 francs, as you intended, and give me the 2 francs d ference.” 3 £5 | | i | i { w Why Men Cooks Seldom Smoke. “Men cooks make a mistake to smoke. Men cooks that smoke have a hard time to get work.” “Why so?” inquired a woman cook. “Because you don't like your cook to bend over the cooking with a cigar in his mouth. It doesn’t look neat when you go down into the kitchen to see bim finger the wet stub of a cigarette and then plunge his hands into the puff paste. Sometimes, in fact, if you have a man cook that smokes you will find ashes op the steak. I know a cor- poration lawyer who once found a ci- gar end in the soup. Do you think he'd ever employ after that a smoking cook ?’—Cincinnati Enquirer. Man Eating Lions. Of African lions Miss Kirkland in her book on Africa writes: “As a rule, it is only old lions which attack human beings. They grow too decrepit to be able to catch the more agile antelopes, which are their lawful prey; so, goaded by a hunger which age cannot wither or lessen, they pounce on unwary mor- tals.” Respectability. Max O'Rell was once staying with a friend at Edinburgh. Starting for a walk on Sunday, he took up his walk- ing stick. “Do you mind taking an umbrella?’ asked his conscientious host. “It looks more respectable.” Parental Prejudice. “But why didn't you consult your father and me before you were mar- ried?” “Because, mamma, 1 was afraid you might prejudice me against him.”— Life. At the Bal Masque. Gertle—You danced that twostgp dl- vinely. Who taught you? Nell—-My two stepsisters.—Illustrated Bits. The Zones. Teacher—How many zones are there? Small Boy—Six. Teacher—No; there are but five. However, you may name six if you can. Small Boy—Torrid. north temperate, south temperate. north frigid, south frigid and ozone. Chicago News. His Genius. “Why do people think he's a genius? Nobody can understand what he's talk- ing about.” “No, but he can make people believe that he does.”—Exchange. WALK-OVER SHOES. YOU CAN TELL by merely looking at it whether a shoe is stylish or not but you have to try it for yourself to discover whether it feels comfortable, retains its shape or renders good ser- WALK-OVER Shoes not only look well but are equally satisfactory in every other particular. It isn’t sim- ply what they see but what WALK OVER wearers find out for themselves that make them come again. vice. Prices $4 and $5 YEAGER’S SHOE STORE. successor to Yeager & Davis. Bush Arcade Building, BELLEFONTE, PA. Wey 80 WEAK? LIFE AWAY. HAVE LEARNED THIS FACT. When a healthy man or woman begins to run down w t t cause, be- comes weak, languid, hy sufters batkache, headache, Jodie and urinary d re, look to kidoeys for the cause of it le the well and they will keep Loa well. Doar's Kidney Pills cure sick kidoeys and keep them well Here is Bellefonte testimony to ve it rs. John Andress, 3. Spring St., Belle- fonte, Pa., says; “hoan's Kidney Pills have been a great blessing to me. I suf- fered severely from a constant, dun, hag. og backache and pains across the loins, could hard| day and no ambition 10 H work. [ could hardly walk without falling and was Io a very serious condition when Doan's Kidney Pills were brought to my attention. 1 procured a box at Green's the promptness relief from the aches and pains was grati- fring. [ am giad to recommend Doan's Kidney Pills.” For sale by all dealers, Price 50 cents, Foster Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United Remember the name—Doan's—and take no other. 5-17 sadaiery. KIDNEY TROUBLES MAY BE SAPPING YOUR BELLEFONTE PEOPLE MONEY SAVED IS MONEY MADE Reduced in price—horse sheets, lap spreads and fly nets—for the next thirty days. We have de- termined to clean up all summer goods, if you are in she market for this class of goods you can’t do better than call and supply your wants at thie store. We have the largest assortment of SINGLE axp DOUBLE DRIVING HARNESS in the county ana at to suit the buyer. If you do not have one of our HAND-MADE SINGLE HARNESS you have missed a good thing. We are making a speoial effort to sup- ply you with a harness that yon may have no concern about any parts breaking. These harness are made from select oak stook, with a high-grade workmanship, A GUARANTEE FOR TEN YIARS with each set of harness. We have on hand a fine lot of harness ranging in price from La $25.00. We carry a larg? line of oils, 2 «le grease, whips, onrry- combs, sponges, and everything a about a horse. We will take Pleasure in Sowing our s whether you av ive ue a call and see for yourself. Yours Respeotfally, JAMES SCHOFIELD, Spring street, 34-37 BELLEFONTE. (rT Y. WAGNER, Brocxeauory Minis, Berrevoss Pa. ROLLER FLOUR, FEED, CORN MEAL, Ete. Also Dealer in Grain. Manufactures and has on hand at all Jithes the following brands of high grade WHITE STAR, OUR BEST. HIGH GRADE, VICTORY PATENT, FANCY PATENT -—formerly Phes- nix Mills high grade brand. The only place in the county where SPRAY, extraordin. grade of Spring wheat er Flow can be ALSO: INTERNATIONAL STOCK FOOD. FEED OF ALL KINDS, Whole or Manufactured, All kinds of Grain bought st office. Exchanges Flour for Wheat. OFFICE and STORE, - Bishop Street, Bellefonte, - - - ROOPSBURG, a ——— Insurance. ve avavaee me: PREFERRED ACCIDENT INSURANCE 00. THE $5,000 TRAVEL POLICY AVL VW LHTAH VTA PREMIUM $12 PER YEAR, payable quarterly if desired. Larger or smaller amounts in pro portion. Any person, male vr female preferred ina in. I iyied dtcupation, 13 teen of age of good moral and Ls condition may insure under policy. FIRE INSURANCE : I invite your aiteatioute my fire nsurance Agency and Most Extensive Line ot Sond Companies ted afeosy in Cintial Penneylvania. H. E. FENLON, Agent, Bellefonte, Pa. 50-21 Coal and Wood. EPWakD K. RHOADS Shipping and Commission Merchant, DEALER [Nw— ANTHRACITE axp BITUMINOUS fren ==CORN EARS, SHELLED CORN, OATS «ww sad other grains, —BALED HAY and STRAW BUILDERS and PLASTERERS' SAND ~KINDLING WOOD-— by tha bunch or cord as may suit purchasers. Respectfully solicits the patronage friends and the public, at saasee HIS COAL YARD...... Telephone Calls {Contest 1: oe. near the Passenger Station. 1-18 JOHN F. GRAY & SON, (Successors to Grant Hoover.) AND ACCIDENT INSURANCE. a ~——NO ASSESSMENTS, — Do not fail to give us a call hefore insuring ° Jour Lite of 5 as we are in position Office iu Crider's Stone Building, 43-18-1y BELLEFONTE, PA. D. W. WOODRING. GENERAL FIRE INSURANCE. Represents only the strongest and mos! prompt paying companies. Gives reliable insurance at the very lowest rates and pays promptly when losses occur. Office at 119 East Howard street, Bellefonte, Pa. 68:80 Fine Job Printing. = JOB PRINTING 0w=A SPECIALTY~—o0 AT THE WATCHMAN OFFIOE. There is no style of work, frome the cheapest Dodger” to the finest {—BOOE-WORK,~—} that we cannot do In the Joost satisfactory man. ner, and Prices consistent with the class of work. Call om or communicate with this office. I